Abstract

BackgroundNeurological injuries remain the leading cause of death in comatose patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Adequate blood pressure is of paramount importance to optimize cerebral perfusion and to minimize secondary brain injury. Markers measuring global cerebral ischemia caused by cardiac arrest and consecutive resuscitation and reflecting the metabolic variations after successful resuscitation are needed to assist a more individualized post-resuscitation care. Currently, no technique is available for bedside evaluation of global cerebral energy state, and until now blood pressure targets have been based on limited clinical evidence. Recent experimental and clinical studies indicate that it might be possible to evaluate cerebral oxidative metabolism from measuring the lactate-to-pyruvate (LP) ratio of the draining venous blood. In this study, jugular bulb microdialysis and immediate bedside biochemical analysis are introduced as new diagnostic tools to evaluate the effect of higher mean arterial blood pressure on global cerebral metabolism and the degree of cellular damage after OHCA.Methods/designThis is a single-center, randomized, double-blinded, superiority trial. Sixty unconscious patients with sustained return of spontaneous circulation after OHCA will be randomly assigned in a one-to-one fashion to low (63 mm Hg) or high (77 mm Hg) mean arterial blood pressure target. The primary end-point will be a difference in mean LP ratio within 48 h between blood pressure groups. Secondary end-points are (1) association between LP ratio and all-cause intensive care unit (ICU) mortality and (2) association between LP ratio and survival to hospital discharge with poor neurological function.DiscussionMarkers measuring cerebral ischemia caused by cardiac arrest and consecutive resuscitation and reflecting the metabolic changes after successful resuscitation are urgently needed to enable a more personalized post-resuscitation care and prognostication. Jugular bulb microdialysis may provide a reliable global estimate of cerebral metabolic state and can be implemented as an entirely new and less invasive diagnostic tool for ICU patients after OHCA and has implications for early prognosis and treatment.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03095742). Registered March 30, 2017.

Highlights

  • Neurological injuries remain the leading cause of death in comatose patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA)

  • Markers measuring cerebral ischemia caused by cardiac arrest and consecutive resuscitation and reflecting the metabolic changes after successful resuscitation are urgently needed to enable a more personalized post-resuscitation care and prognostication

  • This study addresses strategies for neuroprotection and will randomly assign a total of 60 unconscious resuscitated patients after OHCA in a double-blinded one-to-one fashion to low or high mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) target

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Summary

Discussion

The mortality of patients who are admitted in a comatose state to an ICU following successful resuscitation after cardiac arrest remains significant. Markers measuring global cerebral ischemia caused by cardiac arrest and consecutive resuscitation and reflecting the metabolic variations after successful resuscitation are urgently required to assist more personalized post-resuscitation care and prognostication. The LP ratio assessed from MD of cerebral venous blood may play a critical role in detecting the early responses of post-resuscitation care and may predict in-hospital and long-term prognosis in patients affected by brain injury after cardiac arrest. In the future, this might optimize and individualize the treatment of post-cardiac arrest patients and potentially improve outcome. Our surrogate end-point reflects the clinically relevant question of whether higher MAP has a potential neuroprotective effect in our population

Background
Age of at least 18 years
10. Known disease making 180-day survival unlikely
Findings
Strengths and limitations of this study
Full Text
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